Dose-response models in microbial risk assessment consider two steps in the process ultimately leading to illness: from exposure to (asymptomatic) infection, and from infection to (symptomatic) illness. Most data and theoretical approaches are available for the exposure-infection step; the infection-illness step has received less attention. Furthermore, current microbial risk assessment models do not account for acquired immunity. These limitations may lead to biased risk estimates. We consider effects of both dose dependency of the conditional probability of illness given infection, and acquired immunity to risk estimates, and demonstrate their effects in a case study on exposure to Campylobacter jejuni. To account for acquired immunity in...
The utility of characterizing the effects of strain variation and individual/subgroup susceptibility...
Published by the Royal Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License http://cr...
Theoretical models of environmentally transmitted diseases often assume that transmission is a const...
Case-control studies of outbreaks and of sporadic cases of infectious diseases may provide a biased ...
Causal inference of exposure-response relations from data is a challenging aspect of risk assessment...
While microbial risk assessment has been used for over 25 years, traditional dose-response analysis ...
Dose-response models are an important part of quantitative microbiological risk assessments. In this...
The utility of characterizing the effects of strain variation and individual/subgroup susceptibility...
Acquired immunity is an important factor in the epidemiology of campylobacteriosis in the developing...
When pathogenic microorganisms enter the human body via ingestion of food or drinking water, they en...
P>Infection risk assessment is very useful in understanding the transmission dynamics of infectious ...
Dosis- Wirkungsmodelle nehmen im Rahmen von quantitativen mikrobiologischen Risikobewertungen eine z...
International audienceMicrobial risk assessment is dependent on several biological and environmental...
Abstract Dose-response models (DRMs) are used to predict the probability of microbial infection when...
Acquired immunity is an important factor in the epidemiology of campylobacteriosis in the developing...
The utility of characterizing the effects of strain variation and individual/subgroup susceptibility...
Published by the Royal Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License http://cr...
Theoretical models of environmentally transmitted diseases often assume that transmission is a const...
Case-control studies of outbreaks and of sporadic cases of infectious diseases may provide a biased ...
Causal inference of exposure-response relations from data is a challenging aspect of risk assessment...
While microbial risk assessment has been used for over 25 years, traditional dose-response analysis ...
Dose-response models are an important part of quantitative microbiological risk assessments. In this...
The utility of characterizing the effects of strain variation and individual/subgroup susceptibility...
Acquired immunity is an important factor in the epidemiology of campylobacteriosis in the developing...
When pathogenic microorganisms enter the human body via ingestion of food or drinking water, they en...
P>Infection risk assessment is very useful in understanding the transmission dynamics of infectious ...
Dosis- Wirkungsmodelle nehmen im Rahmen von quantitativen mikrobiologischen Risikobewertungen eine z...
International audienceMicrobial risk assessment is dependent on several biological and environmental...
Abstract Dose-response models (DRMs) are used to predict the probability of microbial infection when...
Acquired immunity is an important factor in the epidemiology of campylobacteriosis in the developing...
The utility of characterizing the effects of strain variation and individual/subgroup susceptibility...
Published by the Royal Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License http://cr...
Theoretical models of environmentally transmitted diseases often assume that transmission is a const...